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And the Next Cancelled Show is...

First season was fun, second season was more of a chore as the humour was so much more forced. Sometimes the addition of characters can be just a bit too much. This I felt was the case with Carrie-Anne Moss's ex-wife character, which I didn't like. She felt like baggage that just dragged the show down.
 
I still think the plan is to do a big show with all the popular Walking Dead actors to wrap everything up. Let this stuff rest for five years or so before coming up with something original.
I guess I'm done with the WDverse. I just found out that I missed a whole season of the Maggie/Neegan spin-off and realized that I didn't even care.
 
As much as I have loved the WD universe, it really is time to wrap this up. I tried to watch the Maggie/ Negan show but struggled stay interested. Maggie just isn't an interesting character and Neegan had already completed his character arc. Once the Daryl & Carol show ends, they need to take a break.
 
The Maggie/Negan spin-off has been so disappointing. The idea of exploring the WD universe in New York sounds more fun than what we got.
 
I used to like it a lot, in the early days of Rick Grimes, but it got a bit tiresome and repetitive after a while. Tried Fear for a bit and it, too, got quickly redundant and I lost interest. Haven't even bothered with either the newer Daryl or Negan/Maggie spinoffs and I sadly never got around to watching the Grimes "The Ones Who Live" mini-series. I guess I just kind of moved on. :shrug:
 
I finished TWD just out sheer masochism at that point.
I never finished Fear. I gave up after the bombs dropped; partially because the following storyline was set during peak Covid and I could tell after the first couple of episodes that they were going to keep the cast separated as much as possible and use soundstages and greenscreen for the majority of the episodes.
I haven't watched any of the spin offs.
 
The Walking Dead has no end in sight if there's no cure or the zombies never gain sentience. Because it's just meeting one terrible group of people after another, "because we are the walking dead."
 
The Darryl Dixon show isn't that bad but in reality even the first show was loosing steam even before Rick left the show. At some point they had brought in so many boring new characters I didn't care about while the ones I did had already died or were somehow given a reduced role on the show. Also Darryl and Carol should have became a romantic couple.
 
I'm still a faithful watcher of the Walking Dead franchise, though I got to admit, the most recent season of Dead City (the Negan/Maggie series) did feel rather repetitive and worn down. And I say that as someone who usually considers Jeffrey Dean Morgan the highlight of anything he's in.
 
I finished TWD just out sheer masochism at that point.
I never finished Fear. I gave up after the bombs dropped; partially because the following storyline was set during peak Covid and I could tell after the first couple of episodes that they were going to keep the cast separated as much as possible and use soundstages and greenscreen for the majority of the episodes.
I haven't watched any of the spin offs.

The problem with Fear is they dropped the basic premise to fast of showing us a Waking Dead show right on the cusp of the Zombie uprising happening. By episode 6 or so society has all but collapsed and before you know the show is no different than the original show but just with different people. I did kind of like the idea of season 2 of trying to survive it by going out to sea on boat. I think it would have worked better if they had ran into a Cruise Ship or something were people were living on it and not wanting to go back to land. or a Naval Aircraft Carrier. Something like that.
 
Both ideas likely would have bankrupted the show.

Perhaps. I suppose but maybe if they filmed lots of the interior stuff on stages they could maybe do it. I do think a cruise ship would be easier to fit in a budget than a aircraft carrier. Probably should have to do some filming on land as well. Which makes sense. People go to land to bring back some resources like water.
 
I do think a cruise ship would be easier to fit in a budget than a aircraft carrier.
Opposite, actually. An aircraft carrier could be done on a smaller budget than a cruise ship by getting the US Navy's support to eat up a lot of costs. The catch is, in order to get the Navy's support, the show would have to turn script approval over to them.
People go to land to bring back some resources like water.
I should think a cruise ship or an aircraft carrier should be capable on converting seawater into something drinkable.
 
Opposite, actually. An aircraft carrier could be done on a smaller budget than a cruise ship by getting the US Navy's support to eat up a lot of costs. The catch is, in order to get the Navy's support, the show would have to turn script approval over to them.

I should think a cruise ship or an aircraft carrier should be capable on converting seawater into something drinkable.
Whiskey?
Paging Issac your bartender…
 
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They're planning to translate the Star Catalog to Hulu in countries other than the US in the fall of 2025. Disney also needs to acquire international broadcast rights for old and new Hulu shows produced by non-Disney companies, such as The Handmaid's Tale. It would also be nice if they could open the ESPN Catalog or ESPN+ worldwide.
 
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